BuildingGreen Report

Op-Ed

March 1, 1995
Keep it Up

I just received my first issue of EBN (Vol. 4, No. 1), and I had to drop you a note to tell you how impressed I am with your publication.

I am embarrassed that I haven’t been a subscriber until now. Like a lot of small builders—managing job sites, running the office, chasing new business—I only have time to read about 25% of... Read more

News Brief

March 1, 1995
Sustainable Design Databases for Computers

REDI Guide™Andy Johnson, Editor. On diskette for Macintosh or Windows. Iris Communications, Inc., 258 East 10th Avenue, Suite E, Eugene, OR 97401-3284; 800/346-0104, 503/484-1645 (fax). $49, plus $5 for postage & handling.

Harris Directory: Recycled Content Building Materials, Second... Read more

News Brief

March 1, 1995

Another round of carpet testing is planned by the Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC) to learn about the health effects of some of the less studied VOCs that have been identified as coming from carpet. Unfortunately, the results of the study are unlikely to carry much weight with the industry’s critics because the firm hired to do the... Read more

Feature

March 1, 1995

High-quality, energy-efficient buildings seem like a win-win opportunity, with lower life cycle costs for the building owner and a better, more productive environment for the occupants. The environmental benefits from reduced energy use are icing on the cake. In practice, however, such buildings are rare. Why? It’s not for lack of the right... Read more

News Brief

March 1, 1995
Two Great Newsletters

on Eco-Cities

The Urban Ecologist: The Journal of Urban EcologyStephen Wheeler, Editor, Urban Ecology, 405 14th Street, Suite 701, Oakland, CA 94612; 510/251-6330; urbanecology@igc.apc.org. Quarterly subscription with Urban Ecology membership, $30/year.

EcoCity Cleveland: Ideas and Tools and a Sustainable... Read more

Feature

Separating graywater from sewage and using it for landscape irrigation makes a lot of sense.

March 1, 1995

Separating graywater from sewage and using it for landscape irrigation makes a lot of sense. The practice conserves potable water, allows irrigation during droughts, and increases the life of in-ground septic systems. Unfortunately, use of untreated graywater for irrigation has long been illegal in most of the U.S. Finally, that is beginning to... Read more

News Brief

January 1, 1995

A personal note: The people perhaps most responsible for the recent resurgence of interest in straw-bale construction, Matts Myhrman and Judy Knox, are facing a severe medical situation. Due to this problem and our country’s unresolved health-care needs, they also have a financial crisis to contend with. A group of their friends have organized... Read more

News Brief

January 1, 1995
The Ultimate Green Building Checklist

Environmental Code of Practice for Buildings and Their Services by S. P. Halliday. Published May, 1994 by The Building Services Research and Information Association (BSRIA), Old Bracknell Lane West, Bracknell, Berkshire, RG12 7AH, United Kingdom; 44-344-426511, 44-344-487575 (fax). Cost is £45 (about $70)... Read more

News Analysis

January 1, 1995
Cellulose Expands Despite High Material Costs

According to a market study of cellulose insulation in the November issue of

Resource Recycling, manufacturers have been struggling to keep up with the demand for cellulose insulation over the past year, even as the price of recycled newspaper has skyrocketed. Because of price increases,... Read more

Op-Ed

January 1, 1995

Newt Gingrich’s “Contract with America” contains some admirable goals, including attacking the budget deficit, streamlining government, and cutting red tape. Hidden in the fine print, however, lurks a radical—and dangerous—anti-environment agenda. On examining the package, one can only conclude that the new leadership either doesn’t believe... Read more

News Brief

January 1, 1995

Carrier Corporation is the only building products manufacturer to receive a 1994 Stratospheric Ozone Protection Award from the U.S. EPA. Carrier won the award for developing the first residential central air-conditioner to run on a chlorine-free refrigerant, HFC-134a (a hydrofluorocarbon). The company was simultaneously cited for its new... Read more

News Analysis

January 1, 1995
Mainstream Architects Going Green

Hellmuth, Obata & Kassabaum, Inc. (HOK), the nation’s largest architecture/engineering firm, has some initiatives underway that suggest a growing commitment to environmentally sensitive design.

The company has retained Christine Hammer of Sustainable Design Resources on a half-time basis to serve as... Read more

Product Review

January 1, 1995
The White Panther

Strikes Back

Update: (October 24, 2005)

To the best of our knowledge, this product is no longer available.

Owens Corning, long famous for its pink fiberglass, has just introduced a new fiberglass. And it’s white. The company calls their revolutionary Miraflex™ fiber “the first new form of glass fiber in... Read more

News Brief

January 1, 1995
Newsbriefs

A new efficiency record has been set for the commercial-scale conversion of sunlight into electricity. Efficiency over 20% was achieved in a 2 kW installation near Atlanta, Georgia using a system called Integrated High-Concen- tration Photovoltaics (IHCPV). Built by AMONIX, Inc. of Torrance, California, the system uses low-cost... Read more

News Analysis

January 1, 1995
Northern Forests Report Issued

The Northern Forest Lands Council released its final report,

Finding Common Ground: Conserving the Northern Forest, in September 1994. Following the sale of timberlands in Maine, New Hampshire, Vermont, and New York to land speculators and developers in the 1980s, Congress appropriated funding to study... Read more

Product Review

January 1, 1995
Second Zero-VOC Paint Emerges

Benjamin Moore & Co. is about to introduce nationally the Pristine™ line of interior paints, becoming the second major brand to sell a zero-VOC interior paint line.

Glidden’s Spred 2000 and Lifemaster 2000 lines, introduced in 1993, were the first such paints from a mainstream paint company (see EBN... Read more

News Brief

January 1, 1995

According to the E Source newsletter

E News, replacing vertical-axis, coin-operated washers with horizontal-axis models reduced energy use by 73 percent in a multifamily property in Seattle, Washington. The metered test, performed by Seattle City Light and Seattle Water, confirms expectations of the energy-saving potential of horizontal... Read more

Op-Ed

January 1, 1995
Carpets Can Be Toxic

I would like to offer some comments about your recent Carpeting article (EBN, November/December 1994). First of all, there seems to be a movement afoot in some circles to discredit the work of Dr. Anderson. She and her work have been well respected since she founded her laboratory in 1987. Suddenly, rumors are circulating... Read more

News Brief

January 1, 1995

The Harmony resort on Maho Bay in the U.S. Virgin Islands National Park won the 1994 Grand Award for Environmental Technology from

Popular Science magazine. The resort’s cabins are fully solar-powered and energy-independent, and were built with a minimum of disturbance to the site using many recycled materials. An interactive computer... Read more

News Brief

January 1, 1995
A Portfolio of Green Architecture in America

by Michael J. Crosbie. The American Institute of Architects Press, Washington, D.C., 1994. Hardcover, 192 pages, $39.95.

Contrary to its subtitle,

Green Architecture is more a gallery of environmentally sensitive design than a guide. This elegant, large-format book contains photos and... Read more